What's the power and efficiency? What is it actually?
It's a Fujitsu thingy. Power is 500W with 4 PCie connectors (two 8pin and two 6pins. Yeah, real 8pin PCie connectors). Efficiency is around 80plus bronze.
@goodpsusearch
Yeah, it has a standing 92mm Fan with something that sounds like an FDB thing that blows the air in the PSU.
The best thing: (something you don't see in retail units):
Those rubber things that hold the fan in place...
I disagree. Bigger isn't always better as you can't use the whole airflow of a 'big fan'. And there is a wall (90° angle) a couple of centimeters away from the big fan.
In the end, the layout, design of the coolers and the fan controller are way more important than the size of the fan. That actually doesn't really matter. And tbh: in 9 out of 10 times a 140mm fan is just in for the marketing, not because it's better than a 120mm fan...
Of course it has
Without it, that fan (AFAIR about 3600rpm maxi) would be pretty anoying.
But I don't know why they used such a high rpm fan...
I tried to load the PSU up to its specified value, reached about 450W so far and the fan rotates as high as it did with no load at all. So that's not that bad...
The 3600rpm fan is probably in it because the unit can easily do 125% load @ 50°C (maybe even more)...
And by the way: it fits in my old Chieftec CH-07B case, though I have to remove the top fans...
With some modifications the use in a Cooler Master Storm Trooper would also be possible. You just have to hammer some metal flat (or cut it out)...
Last edited by Stefan Payne; 05-02-2014, 08:47 AM.
It is. More airflow = same airflow with lower RPM (less noise). It's actually quite good the fan covers it from top to bottom - no turbulence by the edges (this is quite interesting phenomenon BTW).
Anyway, I will try to get some funding and buy them out. If it goes well, I will also write review to support the sales so we can have a look how much it can deliver in such case.
I love the PSU already - despite 95 % of the market doing otherwise, they filled it with PCIe connectors. Quite often the PSU can feed much more HW than they provide connection for (like 500W PSU with 100% power at +12 V and it has two 6pin PCIe connectors, really?).
Less jewellery, more gold into electrotech industry! Half of the computer problems is caused by bad contacts
That's good, and the 3.3V rail isn't really used much in modern computers
It's usually used for RAM and SB power. At least on motherboards as recent as Socket 775 and Socket AM2. Not sure about later. Typically around 10W power draw from the motherboard (more or less), so about 3A.
Boards from that era also use 5V for the Northbridge VRM (or NB/SB combo, if unified NB/SB), so again, you probably have another 10-30W, depending on the NB.
Sun Pro: There! That should make those whiny badcap.net users shut up about our fans being too dry.
Probably! Even being cheaply made it should last a long time being well greased.
Typical Sun Pro. I'm guessing this PSU used leaded solder too? I can't imagine what it would look like if they switched to lead-free
I feel dumb for asking but how can you tell just by looking at it? And is the QC really so bad over there that they can use lead in their units? Not that I care because I like lead based solder. I know their soldering isn't great but this unit was especially bad. I find that interesting, because it's one of their higher end units. The terribly made Sun Pro in the Coolmax CA-300 has significantly better soldering, and i've seen quite a few of those.
I like the second psu. DC to DC converter. Can you post a photo of its label?
And why is the first psu scrapped? It couldn't be repaired? It's a HEC btw! I see it has(had) 4x 12V outputs, active PFC, I think it could do more than 500W if it worked.
And why is the first psu scrapped? It couldn't be repaired? It's a HEC btw! I see it has(had) 4x 12V outputs, active PFC, I think it could do more than 500W if it worked.
No, it's a dual rail output. It was scrapped because the ripple and noise was a piece of shit. Like 100mV on the minor rails and 200mV on +12V under full load.
But that's just what the chroma 6000 ATS put out, I have no idea how the voltage would look like...
The scrapped HEC is the 700W layout of the first Cougar series by the way.
Not really. Though they are a lot better than they were a couple of years ago, with the LC-6550 (Huntkey made)...
Still, most of their stuff is better than everything MS-Tech or Inter-Tech has to offer...
The fact that the unit is 80 plus gold is another nice feature.
Doubt that's really 80plus gold. Rather something close to 80plus gold. Still: It's pretty cheap and has DC-DC, so even if it is not gold, it's on the rather cheap side...
For example: Here in Germany a prefered choice would be a Pure Power L8 (HEC made) for about 55€. The LC-Power is about 5-8€ more expansive than this HEC made unit...
Last edited by Stefan Payne; 05-03-2014, 08:32 AM.
Yeah, but still a good quality PSU in the same price range would be better, so there is no reason to buy such a thing new. It's not very cheap!
Like here the coba and for the same price you could get an Antec VP450P, wich is FSP APN based, with CapXon caps, also some CHieftec units, an FSP Hexa (400W) for around 32€, some HEC units (HEC-400TC-2W1)...
So it's rather expansive, no nead to bother with it...
PS: a 750W Combat Power is built worse than this 400W Ecostar (ie smaller caps and so on)...
And here some pictures of a Seasonic unit ;-)
On that PCB on the right, there's a KA7500B and two LM393...
Unspectacular but adequate performance. Inexpensive with performance too adequate to use something that costs more without an absolute need for better performance.
PeteS in CA
Power Supplies should be boring: No loud noises, no bright flashes, and no bad smells.
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To kill personal responsibility, initiative or success, punish it by taxing it. To encourage irresponsibility, improvidence, dependence and failure, reward it by subsidizing it.
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